- File Size: 1784 KB
- Print Length: 368 pages
- Publisher: WaterBrook Press (September 16, 2014)
- 
  Sold by: Random House LLC
- Language: English
- ASIN: B00JNQMZ1Y
Book Description
The crunch of newly fallen snow, the weight of wartime
Three siblings forging new paths and finding love in three stories, filled with the wonder of Christmas
 
Turn
 back the clock to a different time, listen to Bing Crosby sing of 
sleigh bells in the snow, as the realities of America’s involvement in 
the Second World War change the lives of the Turner family in Lafayette,
 Indiana. 
In White Christmas by Cara Putman, Abigail
 Turner is holding down the Home Front as a college student and a 
part-time employee at a one-of-a-kind candy shop. Loss of a beau to the 
war has Abigail skittish about romantic entanglements—until a 
hard-working young man with a serious problem needs her help. 
Abigail’s brother Pete is a fighter pilot hero returned from the European Theatre in Sarah Sundin’s I’ll Be Home for Christmas,
 trying to recapture the hope and peace his time at war has eroded. But 
when he encounters a precocious little girl in need of Pete’s 
friendship, can he convince her widowed mother that he’s no longer the 
bully she once knew?
In Tricia Goyer’s Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas, Meredith
 Turner, “Merry” to those who know her best, is using her skills as a 
combat nurse on the frontline in the Netherlands. Halfway around the 
world from home, Merry never expects to face her deepest betrayal head 
on, but that’s precisely what God has in mind to redeem her broken 
heart.
The Turner family believes in God’s providence during such
 a tumultuous time. Can they absorb the miracle of Christ’s birth and 
God’s plan for a future?
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
White Christmas by Cara PutmanExcerpted from
 Where Treetops Glisten by Tricia Goyer, Cara Putman, and Sarah Sundin
Thursday, October 29, 1942Lafayette, Indiana  Tackle your greatest fear?Professor
 Plante had smiled as he issued his challenge, as if the assignment was 
easy to achieve. Even a privilege. Yet five minutes after class ended, 
Abigail Turner remained frozen at her desk. A school project worth 
twenty-five percent of her grade tied to her greatest fear? And one that
 had to be developed and completed before the holidays? The professor 
called it a simple way to overcome the past by focusing on the future. A
 way to explore the principles they’d discussed and apply them to their 
own lives before trying the ideas on future clients. Didn’t he see how 
tied the two were? How there was nothing simple about confronting dark 
moments in the past that were best avoided?
Abigail pushed 
back from the desk and joined the last students streaming through the 
door to the hall. She didn’t notice anyone else who had broken into a 
cold sweat at the professor’s instructions. In fact, most joked and 
bantered like another week of school was almost over, leading to another
 weekend of studying, Purdue football, and any odd jobs they worked. 
Maybe her fellow students didn’t carry the fears and weight of the past 
as tightly as she did. 
She tried to shake it off as she’d 
done over the years. She still had weeks to create the right experience 
for the project—at least until the end of the semester. Professor Plante
 had even made it sound like the students could have longer if they 
didn’t mind an incomplete on their transcript.
As Abigail 
entered the hallway of Purdue’s University Hall, she froze. The October 
wind gusted through the door and toyed with her hat, but that didn’t 
account for her inability to move. No, she could only blame that on the 
reality that if she was truly to do this assignment, she had to find a 
way to open her heart to someone else. How could she make Professor 
Plante or anyone else understand that she couldn’t do that? Not when it 
risked someone else leaving her.
“I have to get to work.” 
She whispered the words as she tightened her grip on her bag, which was 
loaded down with textbooks, then forced her legs to move.
What
 would her life be like if Sam Troy, her high school love, hadn’t 
enlisted and then died that terrible day the Japanese attacked Pearl 
Harbor? With his death, her carefully constructed dreams for the future 
crashed into an abyss, one she couldn’t seem to climb from.
She
 glanced at her watch and frowned. If she dawdled any more, she’d miss 
the bus that would carry her down the hill, across the Wabash River, and
 to downtown Lafayette in time for her shift at Glatz Candies. With the 
weekend approaching, she looked forward to a couple of days to 
concentrate on the confections that made the restaurant and candy shop 
known around town. Soon she’d learn the secret to making the popular 
candy canes. Maybe she could coax the owner into teaching her the tricks
 to the twisted sweet that night.
“Slow down, Abigail.”
Abigail grinned as her classmate Laurie Bertsche hurried up, her polo coat buttoned to her throat. 
Abigail nudged her friend in the shoulder. “It’s not cold enough for that coat yet.”
“I’m from Florida. We don’t do cold.”
“Then why pick Purdue?”
“It
 picked me, since it was as far away from home as I could afford.” 
Laurie shuddered and gripped the coat around her throat. “What do you 
think of that assignment?” She rushed on before Abigail could interrupt.
 “It should be fun to think of something. There are so many people who 
need help.” Laurie paused, frowned for a moment, then shrugged. “I’m not
 sure what I’ll do yet. Do you have ideas?”
“Not yet.”
“You’re
 so intense; I know you’ll come up with something brilliant.” Merriment 
danced in Laurie’s green eyes. “I need a favor tomorrow night. One of 
the guys I know from town asked me to a movie and dance. I said yes, but
 the problem is he has a buddy. Say you’ll join us.”
“You know my stance on boys.”
Laurie
 singsonged as they waltzed through the doors. “No dating until this war
 business is over.” She paused and a serious glint entered her 
expression. “This isn’t a boy like you’d see here. He’s not a student, 
but a man supporting his family.”
“I can’t, Laurie. If he’s not 
in the military yet, he will be any day. Life is too uncertain to risk 
even friendship.” Abigail had certainly learned that lesson between Sam,
 her brother Alfie, and her sister Annie. Professor Plante wanted her to
 confront her fears by acting in opposition to those very fears that 
life had branded into her. How could she do something and then write an 
essay explaining how the action had changed her? What if she did 
something and found she was still afraid of losing someone she loved? 
Should she help the military boys in some way? Or should she focus on 
children? Would either satisfy her professor?
“You mean you 
won’t. I
 intend to have a great time with Joey, but I wish you’d come. Joey’s 
friend seems nice, and you don’t need to worry that it will be for more 
than one night. Now if something develops with Joey, that’s just icing 
for me.”
“Try ice on the Wabash,” Abigail mumbled. “The 
kind you fall through.” The kind that broke your heart into shattered 
pieces, like the fragile ice coating the wide river, and left you frozen
 inside when you fell into the cold current.
Laurie shook 
her head. “Too early for that kind of ice. I’ll have enough fun for the 
two of us. Call if you change your mind. If not, I’ll see you in class 
Monday.”
The rumble of the bus on State Street warned Abigail she’d better hurry.
  Don’t leave! I can’t be late for work.She
 waved frantically as the driver shifted the bus into gear. She rushed 
into State Street, waving. Brakes screeched and someone tugged her back 
to the curb right before a car whizzed by, horn blaring. Her heart 
stuttered in her chest. She’d come too close to landing under the wheels
 of that car.
“You all right, miss?”
“Thanks to you.” She turned to her rescuer, and his gaze captured her, a mix of sadness and concern swirling in his eyes.
“You coming? Or standing out there all day?”
Heat
 flooded Abigail’s cheeks at the bus driver’s barked words. After 
checking for traffic, she hurried across the street, then tripped up the
 stairs, thrust a token into the box, and stepped down the aisle, barely
 noticing the young man who had rescued her following with a slight 
limp. The grinding gears and the bus’s accompanying lurch pushed her 
down the aisle, and she
collapsed onto an empty seat. The young man took the one opposite her.
She
 glanced at him under her lashes, noting the broad shoulders that 
indicated a life of work. There was something about him, as if his dog 
had just died, that made her want to reach out.
He slouched
 in his seat, hands clasped in his lap, shoulders slumped forward. A hat
 was crammed on top of dark hair that curled at the nape of his neck, 
longer than the regulation cuts worn by enlisted men. There was 
something familiar about him, yet she was certain they’d never been 
introduced. Abigail shrugged off the feeling. Even in the United States’
 heightened war machine during 1942, Purdue’s campus flowed with men. 
The difference was many wore a uniform. This one didn’t. Why? Could it 
be whatever had caused his limp?
His glance rose, colliding
 with hers. Caught. He’d discovered her staring. Still she couldn’t look
 away, not when such uncertainty resided in the pools of his hazel eyes.
 Something inside her froze, caught between wanting to help and 
distancing herself from the pain she saw reflected in the depths of his 
gaze.
Maybe the pain was what she recognized.
She swallowed around a sudden tightness in her throat. “Thank you for what you did out there.”
“You’re welcome.” His deep voice made it sound like it was nothing. He simply took heroic actions every day.
“I’m Abigail. Abigail Turner.”
“Jackson Lucas.” He looked back down at his hands.
Abigail
 felt the chill of the disconnection. She yanked a psychology text from 
the bag at her feet and opened it to the next chapter. The short ride 
would be better used preparing for Monday’s class than wondering about 
the man seated across the aisle from her. 
Her vow to avoid
 romantic relationships, no matter how casual, had not been some 
fly-by-night decision. She had carefully considered her course after 
Sam’s death.
***
I’ll Be Home for Christmas by Sarah SundinExcerpted from
 Where Treetops Glisten by Tricia Goyer, Cara Putman, and Sarah Sundin
Friday, December 3, 1943Lafayette, IndianaGrace
 Kessler poked harder at the typewriter keys, trying to drown out the 
song. Her fingers betrayed her and tapped to the rhythm. Why did Ruby 
Schmidt insist on singing in the secretarial pool? Why did she have to 
choose Christmas songs? And couldn’t she at least pick a song with a 
faster beat?
Grace deciphered her shorthand notes on the 
spiral-bound tablet to her right and finished a business letter from Mr.
 Dubois in Alcoa’s procurement department to Mr. Parkhurst with the War 
Production Board. She zipped the letter out of the typewriter, removed 
the carbon paper, and laid the original in her outgoing basket and the 
copy in the file basket.
Alcoa was America’s top producer 
of aluminum, crucial for the production of airplanes and other defense 
materials. A secretary’s work might not be as glamorous as a nurse or a 
WAVE or a Rosie the Riveter, but it allowed Grace to support both her 
daughter and the war effort.
Grace’s gaze slid to the 
silver picture frame on her desk, which held the last photo taken of 
George and Linnie together, over two years earlier. Linnie had just 
turned four. She sat on George’s lap, and father and daughter grinned at
 each other with total adoration. No little girl could have loved her 
daddy more. 
Pain rose in Grace’s heart, and she ripped her
 attention back to the typewriter. The faster she typed, the faster 
Alcoa could produce aluminum, the faster planes could come off the 
assembly line, and the sooner this war would be over and no more men 
would be shot down by Japanese bullets over Filipino jungles.
They never even found George’s body.
  “I’ ll be home for Christmas . . .” Ruby’s song drifted closer.
Grace winced. No, he wouldn’t.
Something scratched the top of Grace’s head, and Ruby giggled. 
“Ouch.” Grace extracted a little leafy branch from her hairdo—and a couple strands of her own dark brown hair.
“Mistletoe, sweetie.” Ruby puckered lips as red as holly berries. “You need some Christmas spirit.”
Grace replaced a bobby pin and forced herself to smile and wink at Ruby. “I need to get back to work, and so do you.”
Ruby fluffed her platinum hair. “You need a date in the worst possible way. Bobby knows the nicest young man—”
“No.” Grace pinned her strongest look on the girl. “No blind dates. Besides, who in this town would agree to baby-sit Linnie?”
“She’s a handful, isn’t she?”
“Yes,
 she is.” Grace rolled new paper into her typewriter, flipped the 
release lever, and aligned the sheet. “You’d best get back to work 
before Norton sees you.”
Sure enough, the door to the 
supervisor’s office swung open. Grace swept the mistletoe into her lap 
and handed a blank piece of paper to Ruby. “Thank you for taking care of
 this, Miss Schmidt.”
“You’re welcome, Mrs. Kessler.” Ruby skedaddled back to her desk.
“Mrs. Kessler.” Mrs. Norton glared at Grace. “Phone call. Your baby-sitter.”
Sympathetic murmurs rose from the other secretaries, but Grace’s lips and fingertips went numb. Not again.
Somehow
 she stood. She hid the mistletoe in the hip pocket of her bottle-green 
suit jacket and walked on wobbly ankles down the aisle between all the 
clattering typewriters.
“Thank you, Mrs. Norton.” She edged past her matronly supervisor and through the doorway to the office.
Mrs.
 Norton crossed her plump arms. “You’re the only one, Mrs. Kessler. The 
only one who takes so many personal calls. You need to get a handle on 
that child of yours.”
“Yes ma’am.” Grace turned her back on her supervisor to hide her anguish, and she picked up the receiver. “Mrs. Harrison?”
“I’ve
 had it. I’ve had it up to here.” The baby-sitter’s voice climbed and 
shivered. “When she’s here . . . oh, my nerves! And when she goes 
wandering, well, just how much can a woman take?”
Grace clenched the cold black receiver. “Is Linnie there?” 
“Of course not. She’s trying to kill me, I’m sure of it.” 
Inside
 Grace, frustration with Mrs. Harrison wrestled with worry for Linnie. 
The clock read 4:05. Linnie should have arrived half an hour earlier. 
Teaching her daughter how to ride the bus had been necessary when Linnie
 started school in September, but it only encouraged her wandering. Her 
searching. 
Mrs. Harrison jabbered about her nerves, and guilt 
filled Grace. What kind of mother allowed her six-year-old daughter to 
roam the city alone? 
“Excuse me, Mrs. Harrison. I need to call the police.” Again.
“This is it. This is the last time. I simply cannot take it any longer. I quit.” 
Outside
 the tiny office window, Alcoa’s red brick smokestack jutted into the 
gray sky. Grace laid down the receiver, missed, and finally settled it 
in place. 
Mrs. Norton sniffed. “Don’t even think about asking to get off early.” 
“I know, ma’am.” Grace’s voice came out choked. “May I make another call, please?” 
“I ought to charge you.” 
Grace
 dialed 4045 for the Lafayette Police Department, a number she knew by 
heart. While the phone rang, she rubbed the aching knot at the base of 
her skull. 
Lord, please keep my baby safe.So many horrible things could happen to her little girl. And her job. She’d worn out every available baby-sitter.  
How could she stay employed without a baby-sitter? And without a job, how could she pay the bills?  
Worst of all, Grace’s love wasn’t enough for her daughter.  
That knowledge hollowed into her soul.
_________
Lieutenant
 Pete Turner trudged down Sixth Street, hands deep in the pockets of his
 olive drab trousers, his pilot’s crush cap shoved low on his forehead. 
He
 passed Glatz Candies on the far side of the street, angling his head 
away from the cheery red-and-white awning. A year ago, he would have 
bugged his little sister Abigail behind the counter and savored an ice 
cream soda.
Not now. Nothing sounded good. Not ice cream, not teasing, not even family.
A two-hundred-hour combat tour flying a P-47 Thunderbolt fighter plane over Nazi-occupied
Europe had drained him of all grief, all anger, and all joy. So many deaths. So many good young men gone down in flames.
The marquee of the Lafayette Theater advertised 
For Whom the Bell Tolls. Pete had read Hemingway’s book. He’d memorized John Donne’s poem at
 Jefferson High.
“Never send to know for whom the bell tolls,” Pete muttered, “it tolls for thee.”
Today
 even Pastor Hughes hadn’t helped. All Pete wanted was a few words of 
wisdom and comfort to make him feel again. Feel anything.
The 
pastor had gotten him through his big brother Alfred’s death back in 
’27, when Pete was fifteen. Pete owed Pastor Hughes for his salvation, 
for his very life.
But today? Pastor Hughes had leaned back in 
his leather chair, holding his reading glasses and rubbing them with a 
handkerchief while Pete talked. Didn’t he understand how hard it was for
 Pete to spill his guts? And the pastor just rubbed his glasses.
When Pete was done talking, Pastor Hughes leaned forward and said, “Give.”
Give?
“When
 you’re empty inside,” Pastor Hughes said, “the best thing you can do is
 give. Find a need, step outside of yourself, and give.”
Pete 
turned right onto Columbia Street. Maybe the pastor was going senile. 
Pete was an empty pitcher. How could he pour anything out from nothing?
He’d
 have to find his own way to fill up again. And soon. On January 1, he 
had to report for transition training with the Air Transport Command 
Ferrying Division. He had to fly again.
Maybe that was why he 
was roaming downtown. To fill up on all the sights he’d grown up with. 
The memories of a lifetime called out from each brick.
He 
squinted at the buildings, at the trees in their square holes in the 
sidewalk, at the overcast sky. He trained his senses to the chill in the
 air, the sounds of traffic—light as it was—and the conversations of 
passersby. But he didn’t feel anything.
Ahead of him rose the 
high pointy dome of the Tippecanoe County Courthouse in all its 
Victorian glory. Pete and his best friend, Scooter, had loved running 
around the grounds, playing cops and robbers. How many times had they 
decorated the statue of the Marquis de Lafayette or added soap to the 
fountain at his feet? How many times had they been caught?
The thought should have summoned up either guilt or a smile. Nope. Nothing.
He
 headed down the left side of the street, across from the courthouse. A 
few blocks more and he’d reach the Wabash River. Maybe the sound of 
running water would awaken something.
The door of Loeb’s 
department store opened, and Pete held the door for two ladies burdened 
with packages. When they thanked him, he said, “You’re welcome” but 
couldn’t smile. How could he with that infernal song billowing through 
the open door? 
***
Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas by Tricia GoyerExcerpted from
 Where Treetops Glisten by Tricia Goyer, Cara Putman, and Sarah Sundin
Thursday, December 21, 1944Nieuwenhagen, the NetherlandsGray.
 The color of the sky outside the makeshift hospital. Gray. The bare 
tree limbs that reached into the horizon, as if offering naked prayers 
for the Dutch countryside and its war-torn people. 
Gray. The 
ashen faces of the soldiers as the stretcher bearers carried them in on 
litters. American soldiers, mostly, but Germans too, like the man who 
lay on the cot before her. 
Meredith Turner tried to be gentle 
as she bandaged the shoulder of the unconscious German before he awoke 
confused and in pain. The bleeding from his ears meant he had a 
concussion—a serious one—but there wasn’t much they could do for that 
except keep him still.  
She worked quickly. Her fingers did 
their job with skill and speed so that she could get back to the cleanup
 work in the operating room. 
Not ten minutes ago, Dr. Anderson 
had shaken his head, telling her their patient hadn’t made it. They’d 
tried their best to save the young American soldier, but his injuries 
had been too extensive. 
She’d stood there, clamp in hand, unmoving. 
Another life gone. Another family whose boy wouldn’t be coming home. Pain knotted her gut. 
Dr.
 Anderson had looked at her with compassion. He was one of the few field
 doctors who understood the nurses’ pain when seeing the limp bodies of 
the soldiers being carried away. 
“Change the bandages on that 
German brought in earlier, and then you can come back and deal with the 
mess,” he’d told her and then walked toward the front door, going 
outside for fresh air and to clear his head. 
Meredith couldn’t 
help thinking of her brother Pete as she bit her lip and finished 
winding a clean bandage around the arm of the injured German. Pete was 
home. He was safe. She thought of another man she’d loved once, 
wondering if he was in harm’s way, but she quickly pushed the memory of 
David’s handsome face from her mind. She wouldn’t think of him now. To 
do so would only bring hurt, and she was carrying enough of that. 
Meredith
 gazed down at the dark-haired man before her. His head was traumatized,
 and shrapnel had been dug from his arm, shoulder, and neck. His wounds 
weren’t any worse than many others. In time he’d recover and return to 
his family, who probably waited and prayed.  
While it wasn’t 
popular to say, German mothers loved their sons as much as American 
mothers, she supposed. German hearts loved too.
She’d known that
 kind of love. She’d seen it in David’s eyes. The only thing that pushed
 his abandonment from her thoughts was caring for the soldiers who 
returned from the front lines in the ambulances’ steady flow. Her mind 
stayed busy doing her part in making sure those men returned home.
 Home.Someday
 she’d return to Lafayette, Indiana. She wanted that more than anything.
 But since she wouldn’t be returning anytime soon, did she dare hope 
that the Germans wouldn’t get too close? That their American field 
hospital would stay out of harm’s way? And maybe, well, was it too much 
to wish for a little music this Christmas, singing around the piano as 
they always had in the Turner house?
Looking back, she couldn’t 
believe she’d run so far, leaving behind the family she loved. Meredith 
had thought she was too big for that town. She couldn’t wait to see what
 the expansive, wide world had for her. To find sunshine and worth. But 
it hadn’t worked.
Meredith shivered as a cold wind hit the 
window of the schoolhouse where their unit had been set up. The school 
had four wings, and they put them to good use as a receiving room, a 
shock ward, surgery, and post-op. She liked working in the 
post-operation room the best. Even though it tugged on her emotions, she
 liked being there when the soldiers awoke from surgery. She liked 
encouraging them, talking of home, and praying with them. She wanted to 
be the first friendly face they saw when they realized that the war was 
over for them. Because their injuries were debilitating, for most of 
them it meant they’d be going home.
There was also a 
wood-burning stove in each room. There wasn’t enough wood to keep the 
place much above freezing, but the walls offered some relief from the 
frigid chill outside.
At least it was more protection than the 
medical tents she’d been working in since July. The maps, posters, and 
children’s pictures pinned to the walls of the schoolhouse brightened 
her spirits. They reminded her of why she was here—who the American 
soldiers were fighting for.
She and the other nurses had landed 
on Utah Beach July 15, a month after D-Day. She’d expected to see signs 
of the struggle. Blood on the sand. Even though the beach was broken up,
 hit by war, there was no evidence of the thousands and thousands of 
lives lost there. What the soldiers hadn’t cleaned up, the sea had 
washed away.
From France, they’d moved leapfrog-style, following
 the movement of troops to the front line. There were three field units 
in the 53rd Field Hospital. Meredith was in the 3rd Unit. Soldiers with 
stomach and chest wounds who needed immediate care were sent to them 
first. And the sooner the better. Everyone called the first hour after 
an injury the “golden hour.” Depending on his injuries, if the field 
hospital could get the wounded soldier within that time frame, stabilize
 him, and treat him for shock, then the chance for survival was good.
Another round of artillery boomed in the distance, causing a shudder to move through the small brick school.
Meredith
 willed the front lines to stay far away and the supply lines to stay 
open. She released the breath she’d been holding. Her fingers trembled 
as she worked, and she wondered if she’d ever be used to war.
Footsteps
 sounded outside, and two ambulance drivers rushed into the hospital 
with an injured man. The wounded soldier shivered. His face was as pale 
as the snow outside.
“He’s in shock. We need plasma now!” Dr. Anderson called from across the room. He’d returned without Meredith seeing him.
Dina,
 one of the other nurses, rushed to assist him. They all took turns with
 the bad cases. Meredith was thankful it was Dina’s turn. She had 
cleanup to attend to. Would she be able to wipe up the spilled blood 
without shedding a few tears for the lost soldier this time? She doubted
 it.
Meredith tried not to think about that as she listened to 
the shuffle of nurses’ feet scurrying around the room. She finished her 
bandaging, said a quick prayer over the German soldier, and moved to the
 bucket in the corner to retrieve the mop. Thankfully someone had 
brought in clean water.
The last operating area waited—empty, 
silent. She moved toward it and with a swish of the mop started sopping 
up the blood. As the mop swished in a swooping pattern, she looked out 
the window at the mother and three children who hurried by with bundles 
of wood in their hands. They’d been fighting for those kids. For their 
freedom. The Dutch people had been under Nazi occupation for years, but 
the Americans had freed them. The big booms of the distant artillery and
 the news from the front lines that trickled down to them proved the 
Nazis wanted to reclaim their lost hold, but the American boys were here
 to make sure that wasn’t going to happen.
Meredith was 
witnessing history, and all the nurses were glad to be doing their part,
 though their part was far from easy. A few nurses had already lost 
their lives on the front lines. To the readers of 
Stars and Stripes, they
 were sad stories, but to Meredith they were Francis and Betty. Friends 
she’d laughed with and talked late into the night with, sharing secrets 
and stories.
Meredith returned the mop to the bucket. As she 
plunged it down, the water turned red. How much blood had been spilled 
on foreign soil? Too much. That was why it was so important to find a 
way to make Christmas special for the injured. Special Christmas 
music—it was the one thing that wouldn’t leave her thoughts. Meredith 
knew how to sing a number of Christmas carols, and she was sure they’d 
find more talent among the other nurses and doctors. Maybe they could 
even practice a few new numbers to help the soldiers feel not so far 
from home.
In the classroom next door, Dr. Anderson’s frantic 
voice interrupted her hopeful thoughts. The injured soldier who’d just 
been brought in had been placed on the operating table, and Meredith 
could hear Dr. Anderson’s pleading.
“C’mon, boy. Hold on. Your mama wants you home, son . . .”
      
      
About the Authors
 Cara C. Putman, the award-winning author of 19 books, graduated high school at 16, college at 20, and completed her law degree at 27. 
FIRST for Women magazine called 
Shadowed by Grace"captivating"
 and a "novel with 'the works.'" Cara is active at her church and a 
lecturer on business and employment law to graduate students at Purdue 
University's Krannert School of Management. Putman also practices law 
and is a second-generation homeschooling mom. Putman is currently 
pursuing her Master's in Business Administration at Krannert. She serves
 on the executive board of American Christian Fiction Writers (ACFW), an
 organization she has served in various roles since 2007. She lives with
 her husband and four children in Indiana. You can connect with her 
online at: 
caraputman.com            
 Tricia Goyer
 is a busy mom of six, grandmother of two, and wife to John. Somewhere 
around the hustle and bustle of family life, she manages to find the 
time to write fictional tales delighting and entertaining readers and 
non-fiction titles offering encouragement and hope. A bestselling 
author, Tricia has published thirty-three books to date and has written 
more than 500 articles. She is a two time Carol Award winner, as well as
 a Christy and ECPA Award Nominee. In 2010, she was selected as one of 
the Top 20 Moms to Follow on Twitter by SheKnows.com. Tricia is also on 
the blogging team at MomLifeToday.com, TheBetterMom.com and other 
homeschooling and Christian sites.In addition to her roles as mom, wife 
and author, Tricia volunteers around her community and mentors teen 
moms. She is the founder of Hope Pregnancy Ministries in Northwestern 
Montana, and she currently leads a Teen MOPS Group in Little Rock, AR. 
Tricia, along with a group of friends, recently launched www.NotQuiteAmishLiving.com, sharing ideas about simplifying life. She also hosts the weekly radio podcast, Living Inspired. Learn more about Tricia at www.triciagoyer.com.
Sarah Sundin enjoys writing about the drama and romance of the World War II era. The Wings of the Nightingale series (With Every Letter, 2012,  On Distant Shores, August 2013, and In Perfect Time,
 August 2014) follows three World War II flight nurses as they find 
love, friendship, and peril in the skies and on the shores of the 
Mediterranean. The Wings of Glory series from Revell (A Distant Melody,  A Memory Between Us, and Blue Skies Tomorrow) follows three brothers who are B-17 bomber pilots during World War II. 
Sundin
 lives in northern California with her husband, three children, an 
antisocial cat, and a yellow lab bent on destroying her writing career. 
When she isn't driving kids to tennis and karate, she works on-call as a
 hospital pharmacist and teaches Sunday school and women's Bible 
studies. 
My Review
 I was excited to read Where Treetops Glisten as I am a huge fan of author Sarah Sundin. Where Treetops Glisten is a book containing three short novels that take place during World War II at Christmastime. I love reading Christmas books to get me in the mood for Christmas and I am sure that you probably do too! And if you haven't been reading Christmas themed books to get you in the mood for Christmas, it is time to start now.
What is particularly enjoyable about Where Treetops Glisten is that the three short novels are all linked to one another. The three short novels included revolve around the Turner family. There is a bit of something for everyone in these short novels. These books are written by Christian authors therefore you know the stories are going to have a message. As the setting is during World War II, these short novels are great for people who like historical novels. They are great for people who like romances as well as people who like chick lit. There is something for everyone!
So relax and let Where Treetops Glisten let your mind wander back to World War II at Christmastime. I highly recommend this collection of WWII Christmas stories.